El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is the strongest signal in interannual climate variation. El Nino increases the precipitation over the equatorial central-eastern Pacific, which releases more latent heat into the tropical atmosphere and thus drives variations of the global climate system like a heat engine.
It has been reported that ENSO-induced precipitation anomalies will shift and extend eastward under global warming. The zonal shift of the ENSO heat engine would remarkably change responses of the global climate system to ENSO forcing. However, the projected result has not been supported by a robust mechanism, mainly due to the large uncertainties in the amplitude change of ENSO under the global warming.
In a recently published study in Science Advances, an international team from China, UK and USA proposed a new mechanism to understand the eastward shift and extension of ENSO-induced precipitation anomalies under global warming. They analyzed a large ensemble climate change simulation conducted by the Met Office in UK.
"We found that under global warming, the weakened easterly trade wind over the tropical Pacific would weaken the meridional overturning circulation of the subtropical cell, and further cause the narrowing of the meridional span of ENSO," said the corresponding author Dr. WU Bo from the Institute of Atmospheric Physics (IAP) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
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